It's irrelevant if the crowd thinking something doesn't determine that something is right/correct. — Terrapin Station
It's irrelevant when it commits the fallacy of appealing to the masses and not otherwise. The exceptions have been explained to you. — S
I was merely pointing out that your approach to linking violations of other rights such as right to life to hate speech by insisting on statistics or data is wrong and as a matter of fact, they are logically interlinked. As a result , we have the paradox of tolerance or paradox of freedom, however you phrase it.
No, exceptions include explaining how language works. — S
Speech acts are statements of thought/belief. Thought/belief have efficacy. They lead to patterns of thinking, habits, and acts.
Does anyone here deny this?
In another sleight of hand, some have applied the harm principle to speech, and based on this have evoked the paradox of tolerance in order to defend censorship. — NOS4A2
Only insofar as making statements about how most people (in some population) use language. — Terrapin Station
That's implicit in saying that this or that interpretation is right or wrong. — S
That's yet another problem with some of the papers being referenced. Hate speech is contributing to hate crimes in many cases simply because hate speech is considered a hate crime, with the idea that the speech is a harm in itself.
“in a democracy, it is necessary that people should learn to endure having their sentiments outraged”
Again, people use right/wrong, correct/incorrect with a normative implication. Examples of that abound, and it's inherent in anyone correcting anyone who uses language unusually. We see it with grammar police all the time, for example.
But mere descriptive statements of how language is used among some population have no normative weight at all. — Terrapin Station
History shows us that the restriction of speech is just too powerful a tool/weapon to cede to the state. — DingoJones
The purpose of anything isn't determined by rationality, by the way. And neither are normatives. — Terrapin Station
So let's say that someone agrees with most people on foundational views re good/bad.
In that context, what is supposed to be the rhetorical point of mentioning that most people feel that hate speech has no benefit? — Terrapin Station
Only when it is ceded in excess. I don't believe that restrictions on hate speech are an excessive restriction on the freedom of expression. It's too extreme a position to consider any restriction whatsoever as excessive. That's a position for those who have taken leave of their senses. And I doubt anyone here would support going to the other extreme and giving the state total control.
Article 19 of the UN human rights code:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”
Is this an example of the UN taking leave of their senses? — NOS4A2
Didnt a comedian go to jail for teaching his dog to do a Nazi salute? Thats the same kinda thing. — DingoJones
So still a problem in the UK. Maybe both countries should be like something else. — DingoJones
Meh, Im not a US hater. Plenty of stupid to go around, US included. Its that pesky human problem, always fucking everything up. — DingoJones
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